How To Deal With Stress

What Are You Afraid Of?

A great strategy to deal with stress is contained within the following quote:

“Stress always comes from fear” Louise Hay

I think I would add to it, “and what beliefs you’ve added to the situation” but you’ll learn more about that in a moment. So,

“Stress always comes from fear and what beliefs you’ve added to the situation”

As you've learned from other articles on my site, any event “just is” until you choose what it means
to you and how you decide to react to it. So, the next time you feel
particularly stressed, take the time to ask yourself, “What am I afraid
of?”

At Work
If you asked yourself this question at work, the answer might be something like:

I’m stressed because I have to finish this document today and,
- I’m afraid I’ll lose my job if I don’t get it done
- I’m afraid people will be mad at me if I don’t get it done
- I’m afraid I’ll lose people’s respect if I don’t get it done

Often you’re so driven by the feeling of “stress” that you don’t
consider what the reasoning is behind the stress. You’re reacting to
fear rather than the real issue at hand. By questioning the fear, you
discover not only what’s really stressing you out but you can also take
far more effective action in dealing with the situation.

In the above example, once you knew you were afraid people would
be mad at you, then you could discuss the issue with those people and
see if you could come up with a solution rather than isolating yourself
with your fear. Also, until you discuss it with them, you don’t really
know that they would be mad at you. You’re just assuming they will be.
You’re still going to want to get the document done but now you have a
better idea of what the real issue is and be open to some other
alternatives.

It’s the unacknowledged fear in the back of your mind that gives
you the greatest stress. This fear grows bigger and bigger in your mind
the more you try to deny it or ignore it. By shining a light directly
on it then you can either take steps to address it or realize that
you’re putting too much emphasis on something. If you only listen to the
fear then you'll be tempted to make some irrational or poor decisions.

Are Your Beliefs Causing You Stress?
Also, by questioning what you’re really afraid of, you may discover that
your beliefs are causing you the stress and not the actual situation.
For example, you feel stressed because you feel you have to have a huge
birthday party for your child. If you questioned the stress and
discovered that you were afraid that “people will think I’m a bad parent
if I don’t have a big, expensive party for Lisa’s 2nd birthday” then
you can look at that belief in several ways.

- Would people really think you were a bad parent? Probably not.

- Are you having the party for Lisa or because you want to impress the other parents? Which is more important?

- Do YOU want to have a big party?

- Do YOU want to spend the money on this? If not, take back your
power and tell yourself, "I choose not to spend my money on this". (This
is preferable to saying, "I can't afford this". Saying that you can't
afford something will most likely just frustrate you and make you feel
like you're poor and that you can't have the things you want. Instead
choose where you want to spend your money.)

You get to choose how you're going to react now instead of simply
allowing a belief that may not even be true to scare you into having a
party costing you more than you want or what you feel like organizing.
You’ve now taken control of the situation simply by questioning your
fear.

This is an Easy "Deal With Stress" Strategy
This is such a great strategy because it's quick and easy to do. You've
taken the time to step back from the situation and figure out what's
really going on. You can now make a decision on how to react instead of
simply reacting out of fear. You deal with the stress so it loses its
power over you. You're back in control of your thoughts and your life
simply by asking yourself, "What am I afraid of?"

And, your stress ball will love you for it.

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